Opinion
No. 25 WAP 2023
07-17-2024
Carla Michelle Castello, Esq., Casey Alan Coyle, Esq., for Amicus Curiae American Property Casualty Insurance Association. Bradley R. Andreen, Esq., Vito S. Bochicchio, Esq., Christopher C. Rulis, Esq., Rulis & Bochicchio, LLC, for Appellant Brick Street Mutual Insurance Company. Audrey Jacobsen Copeland, Esq., John Jacob Hare, Esq., Estelle Kokales McGrath, Esq., Marshall Dennehey Warner Coleman & Goggin, PC, for Appellant Premier Comp Solutions, LLC. Daniel Seth Altschuler, Esq., Karyn Dobroskey Rienzi, Esq., Post & Schell, P.C., for Appellee Lackawanna Casualty Company. Frank Hainer Stoy IV, Esq., Peter St. Tienne Wolff, Esq., Pietragallo Gordon Alfano Bosick & Raspanti, LLP, for Appellee UPMC Benefit Management Services d/b/a UPMC Work Partners. Aaron Hillel Weiss, Esq., Zimmer Kunz, PLLC, for Appellee Elite Care, RX, LLC.
Appeal from the Order of the Superior Court entered May 23, 2023 at No. 1144 WDA 2020, affirming the Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County entered June 5, 2020 at No. GD-19-005312 and remanding. Arnold I. Klein, Judge
Carla Michelle Castello, Esq., Casey Alan Coyle, Esq., for Amicus Curiae American Property Casualty Insurance Association.
Bradley R. Andreen, Esq., Vito S. Bochicchio, Esq., Christopher C. Rulis, Esq., Rulis & Bochicchio, LLC, for Appellant Brick Street Mutual Insurance Company.
Audrey Jacobsen Copeland, Esq., John Jacob Hare, Esq., Estelle Kokales McGrath, Esq., Marshall Dennehey Warner Coleman & Goggin, PC, for Appellant Premier Comp Solutions, LLC.
Daniel Seth Altschuler, Esq., Karyn Dobroskey Rienzi, Esq., Post & Schell, P.C., for Appellee Lackawanna Casualty Company. Frank Hainer Stoy IV, Esq., Peter St. Tienne Wolff, Esq., Pietragallo Gordon Alfano Bosick & Raspanti, LLP, for Appellee UPMC Benefit Management Services d/b/a UPMC Work Partners.
Aaron Hillel Weiss, Esq., Zimmer Kunz, PLLC, for Appellee Elite Care, RX, LLC.
ORDER
PER CURIAM
AND NOW, this 17th day of July, 2024, the Court being evenly divided, the order of the Superior Court is AFFIRMED.
Justice McCaffery did not participate in the consideration or decision of this matter.
JUSTICE DOUGHERTY, in Support of Affirmance
I agree with Justice Wecht’s well-reasoned opinion finding the panel below "misinterpreted Subsection 306(f.1)(5) [of the Workers’ Compensation Act (the Act), 77 P.S. § 531(5)] and created a state of affairs that plainly conflicts with the Act’s exclusive remedy provision." Opinion in Support of Reversal at 14. Nevertheless, I would affirm the decision below and allow the civil action filed by Elite Care, RX, LLC to proceed based on the doctrine of judicial estoppel.
The facts of this case are not in dispute. Appellant Insurers refused to make payments to Elite Care totaling $548,035.28 in prescriptions for 110 injured employees on the basis that Elite Care was not a provider under the Act. Significantly, in a letter dated March 16, 2018, an attorney from Premier Comp Solutions, LLC told Elite Care that if it disagreed with Insurers’ decision, "its exclusive remedy is to file an Application for Fee Review with the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Bureau." Complaint, 4/9/2019, at Exhibit 1. "Based solely upon these … representations, and in an abundance of caution," Elite Care attempted to confirm its provider status, and receive payment, by filing fee review petitions for each patient, as Insurers demanded. Id. at ¶30. But when some of those fee review determinations started to go in Elite Care’s favor, "[t]o Elite Care’s surprise, and in direct contrast to [Insurers’] prior representations, [Insurers] then appealed these decisions to a Hearing Officer and argued that the Fee Review process lacked jurisdiction over this issue of whether Elite Care was an agent of these Providers." Id. at ¶32. "Those Hearing Officers authored Opinions and Orders finding that the Fee Review process lacked jurisdiction over this issue and specifically advising that Elite Care may wish to pursue other remedies, which may be available outside of the fee review process." Id. at ¶33. Rather than appealing to the Commonwealth Court, Elite Care again did as instructed and filed the civil action at issue, seeking a declaration that it is a provider under the Act and also alleging fraud, civil conspiracy, and unjust enrichment. In response, Insurers filed preliminary objections, alleging, inter alia, the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction because Elite Care was required to seek payment through the workers’ compensation system pursuant to the Act’s exclusivity provision, 77 P.S. § 481. See Preliminary Objections of Premier Comp Solutions, LLC, at 4-5. The trial court overruled Insurers’ preliminary objections and the Superior Court affirmed.
As this appeal is from the trial court’s order overruling Insurers' preliminary objections, we must accept as true the facts alleged in Elite Care’s Complaint. See Raynor v. D’Annunzio, 663 Pa. 582, 243 A.3d 41, 52 (2020).
77 P.S. § 531(1)(i) ("The employer shall provide payment in accordance with this section for reasonable surgical and medical services, services rendered by physicians or other health care providers, including an ad ditional opinion when invasive surgery may be necessary, medicines and supplies, as and when needed.").
According to the Complaint, "Premier Comp served as the Third Party Administrator and/or Bill Payer for [insurers] with respect to the claims at issue." Complaint, 4/9/2019, at ¶9.
77 P.S. §531(6).
Before this Court, Insurers continue to argue the trial court lacked jurisdiction over Elite Care’s civil action. Generally, and going forward, I agree trial courts lack jurisdiction over civil actions seeking payment for workers’ compensation benefits for the reasons set forth in the Opinion in Support of Reversal. However, I conclude judicial estoppel bars Insurers from advancing that argument in this particular case.
"Judicial estoppel is an equitable, judicially-created doctrine designed to protect the integrity of the courts by preventing litigants from ‘playing fast and loose’ with the judicial system by adopting whatever position suits the moment." Sunbeam Corp. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 566 Pa. 494, 781 A.2d 1189, 1192 (2001). In short, it "prohibits parties from switching legal positions to suit their own ends." Id. And, importantly, this Court has held judicial estoppel may even apply to jurisdictional arguments. See Buehler v. Philadelphia & R. Ry. Co., 280 Pa. 92, 124 A. 325, 326 (1924) ("A defendant, in an action between the same parties, having procured a dismissal of plaintiff’s claim in a former proceeding, through the substantive defense of jurisdiction, is estopped in a subsequent action from denying the position there taken, the affirmative of which grounds the second action, unless the admission of record on which the estoppel is based is the result of fraud, accident, or mistake.") (citation omitted); see also Ligon v. Middletown Area Sch. Dist., 136 Pa.Cmwlth. 566, 584 A.2d 376, 380 (1990) ("Judicial estoppel has been applied to prevent a party from changing his or her position regarding jurisdiction because it suited that party’s interests.") (citation omitted).
Here, it is clear that Insurers have assumed inconsistent positions. First, Insurers told Elite Care it had to utilize the fee petition process within the Workers’ Compensation Bureau. Then, once Elite Care started succeeding before that body, Insurers appealed and argued the fee review hearing officers lacked jurisdiction to determine provider status. After Insurers’ argument persuaded the hearing officers to dismiss Elite Care’s fee petitions, Elite Care filed a civil suit. During the civil action, Insurers again switched their position and argued to the trial court that it lacked jurisdiction because provider status must be determined through the workers’ compensation system.
Insurers admit their position has changed, but they claim the switches are simply due to "uncertainty in the case law as to whether an entity that did not directly provide healthcare services to a workers’ compensation claimant was entitled to bring claims for reimbursement for medical bills before a Fee Review Hearing Officer or a Workers’ Compensation Judge." Insurers’ Brief at 9 n.1. They specifically point to Armour Pharmacy v. Bureau of Workers' Compensation Fee Review Hearing Office (Wegman's Food Markets, Inc.), 206 A.3d 660, 672 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019) (en banc) (provider status may be determined by fee review hearing officer under the Act), which distinguished and, to the extent it was inconsistent with its decision, overruled Selective Insurance Co. of America v. Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Fee Review Hearing Office (The Physical Therapy Institute), 86 A.3d 300, 305 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014) (determination of provider status beyond scope of the fee review process). But this decision does not justify Insurers’ tactics.
As noted, on March 16, 2018, over one year prior to the decision in Armour Pharmacy, an attorney for Insurers told Elite Care its exclusive remedy was through the fee review process. In truth, though, Selec- tive Insurance remained precedential at the time, meaning Elite Care’s fee petitions were doomed to fail because Insurers intended to challenge their provider status. When that in fact happened, Elite Care was instructed — both by then-prevailing law and by individual hearing officers — to file a civil action. See Physical Therapy Institute, Inc. v. Bureau of Workers Compensation Fee Review Hearing Office (Selective Insurance Co. of SC), 108 A.3d 957, 960 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015) (reaffirming Selective Insurance and advising that if "either party believe[s] that the other is effecting a fraud, it can pursue that claim in a legal action, such as a declaratory judgment action"); N.T. Fee Review Hearing, 5/7/2019, at 9-10 (Elite Care asserting "the only reason that [it] had filed in Fee Review was based upon opposing counsel’s statement to [it] that Fee Review was its exclusive remedy" and noting "[t]hat language was also mirrored in [the hearing officer’s] previous Order, which stated … Elite Care RX, LLC may also wish to pursue other remedies which may be available outside of the Fee Review process."); see also Elite Care’s Trial Court Brief at 10 (observing that "even the workers’ compensation forum itself has agreed that [Elite Care’]s civil action is appropriate" and noting that "Elite Care has taken the precise legal action that the Commonwealth Court suggested it should in Physical Therapy").
Yet, in the face of that civil action, Insurers again changed positions and argued the trial court lacked jurisdiction. Although Armour Pharmacy may have justified Insurers’ final switch, it does not explain their earlier conduct. Instead, it seems apparent that Insurers continuously changed course only to avoid liability. Thus, rather than reward Insurers for their gamesmanship, I would apply Buehler and hold Insurers are judicially estopped from challenging the trial court’s jurisdiction over Elite Care’s civil action.
JUSTICE WECHT, in Support of Reversal
The Superior Court below affirmed a decision allowing a lawsuit for fraud, civil conspiracy, and unjust enrichment to proceed against workers’ compensation insurance carriers that allegedly failed to reimburse providers for medications dispensed to injured workers. As I detail below, that holding plainly conflicts with the Workers’ Compensation Act’s exclusive remedy provision and was based upon a misunderstanding of the Act’s fee review provision. The Superior Court’s decision should be reversed.
I. Statutory Background
Under the Workers’ Compensation Act, employers and their insurers are liable for a claimant’s reasonable medical expenses, which includes medication and medical supplies.1a Generally speaking, disputes about medical expenses can be litigated three different ways within the workers’ compensation system: utilization review, penalty petitions, and fee review.
Utilization review can be used by employers to challenge the reasonableness or necessity of a billed service, or by providers to secure pre-approval from the insurer for a medical service.2a When a request for utilization review is made, an impartial "provider licensed in the same profession and having the same or similar specialty as that of the provider of the treatment under review" will consider the reasonableness and necessity of the treatment and render a decision. A party who disagrees with the outcome of the utilization review can appeal the determination to a Workers’ Compensation Judge, and then eventually to the Commonwealth Court as well.
Id. §531(6)(i).
Id. § 531(6)(iv).
Penalty petitions arise in a different context. A claimant who believes that their employer has failed to satisfy its statutory obligation to pay necessary medical expenses can file a penalty petition, which will then be decided by a WCJ. Unlike utilization review, which medical providers can initiate themselves, it is only the clamant that can file a penalty petition. This avenue therefore may be of limited utility to medical providers whenever the claimant is unmotivated to file a penalty petition against their employer for one reason or another.
One could imagine reasons why a claimant who is receiving wage-loss benefits under the Act might be reluctant to initiate adversarial proceedings against their employer primarily for the benefit of a medical provider. For example, a claimant, in an uncontested case who is in the process of negotiating a settlement with their employer might opt to forego seeking penalties. A claimant who expects to return to work with their employer post-recovery may be similarly apprehensive about filing a penalty petition. That said, the Act incentivizes claimants to file penalty petitions by imposing monetary penalties on employers who fail to make required payments—with such penalties being payable to the claimant. 77 P.S. § 991(d)(1) (stating that employers may be penalized up to ten percent of the amount awarded (or up to fifty percent if the delay was "unreasonable or excessive") and that any penalties are "payable to the same persons to whom the compensation is payable"),
Fee review is the third avenue for billing challenges. Under a provision of the Act passed in 1993, providers can challenge the "amount or timeliness" of the insurer’s payment by filing a fee review application. Fee review applications are first decided administratively by the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation, but either party can take a de novo appeal to a special fee review hearing officer. The hearing officer’s ruling can then be appealed to the Commonwealth Court. This process is governed by Subsection 306(f.1)(5) of the Act, which states that
It is my understanding that these fee review hearing officers are sometimes (though not always) WCJs wearing different hats. See Prescription Partners, LLC v. Bureau of Workers’ Comp. Fee Rev. Hearing Off., No. 2107 C.D. 2014, 2015 WL 6473394, at *1 (Pa. Commw. July 17, 2015) (Cohn Jubelirer, J., concurring) (noting that "the Hearing Officer in the instant matter was a Workers’ Compensation Judge" acting in a different capacity).
[a] provider who has submitted the reports and bills required by this section and who disputes the amount or timeliness of the payment from the employer or insurer shall file an application for fee review with the department no more than thirty (30) days following notification of a disputed treatment or ninety (90) days following the original billing date of treatment.
The Act elsewhere defines a "provider" as a "healthcare provider," which in turn is defined to mean:
any person, corporation, facility or institution licensed or otherwise authorized by the Commonwealth to provide health care services, including, but not limited to, any physician, coordinated care organization, hospital, health care facility, dentist, nurse, optometrist, podiatrist, physical therapist, psychologist, chiro
practor or pharmacist and an officer, employe or agent of Such person acting in the course and scope of employment or agency related to health care services.
77 P.S. 129.
This Court has emphasized that fee review is designed to be a simple process with "a very narrow scope." That scope is limited to determining the "relatively simple matters" of " ‘the amount or timeliness’ of an insurer’s payment for a particular treatment." This means that "an employer’s liability for a claimant’s work injury must be established before the fee review provisions can come into play."
Crozer Chester Med. Ctr. v. Dept. of Lab. & Indus., 610 Pa. 459, 22 A.3d 189, 196 (2011).
Id. at 197.
Armour Pharmacy v. Bureau of Workers’ Comp. Fee Rev. Hearing Off., 206 A.3d 660, 666 (Pa. Commw 2019) (emphasis added).
II. Case Law Interpreting Subsection 306(f.1)(5)
As I detail below, a trio of Commonwealth Court decisions in the mid-2010s injected unnecessary confusion into the fee review system. That confusion ultimately dissipated in 2019, when the Commonwealth Court, sitting en banc, overruled those three earlier decisions. While this should have resolved the matter, the Superior Court below opted to embrace the Commonwealth Court’s since-discarded line of precedent, ignoring the difficult lessons learned by the Commonwealth Court in the previous decade.
The first of these three erroneous decisions concerned whether a provider billing a workers’ compensation insurer was the same entity that rendered the care to the claimant in the first place. The first-level fee reviewer initially ordered the insurer to pay the provider’s bills, but the fee review hearing officer ruled on appeal that the Bureau lacked jurisdiction over the dispute because it did not concern the "amount or timeliness" of payment, but instead concerned whether the provider (an entity called the Physical Therapy Institute) was a provider under the Act. On further appeal, the Commonwealth Court agreed with the hearing officer, holding that fee review is not the proper forum to resolve an entity’s provider status.
Selective Ins Co of Am. v. Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Fee Review Hearing Off, 86 A.3d 300 (Pa. Commw. 2014) (overruled by Armour Pharmacy, 206 A.3d at 660).
The Commonwealth Court reaffirmed this holding the following year in a case involving the same parties. In Physical Therapy Institute, Inc. v. Bureau of Workers' Compensation Fee Review Hearing Office, 108 A.3d 957 (Pa. Commw. 2015), the Institute explicitly asked the court to overturn its 2014 holding. The Institute emphasized that, if the court’s ruling stands, all an insurer participating in fee review would have to do is assert—whether true or not—that the person or entity submitting the bill is not a provider under the act. Under the Commonwealth Court’s interpretation, that mere allegation would render the Bureau and the fee review hearing officer jurisdictionless to consider the dispute. And because un/underpaid providers lack standing to file penalty petitions directly with the WCJ, the provider’s only recourse would be to encourage the claimant to seek penalties against their employer.
Declining to overturn the 2014 decision, the court reiterated that whether an entity is a provider under the Act is "a question of liability, which is beyond the scope of a fee review and must be decided by a Workers’ Compensation Judge." As for the argument that the court’s interpretation would allow insurers to undermine the entire fee review process just by challenging a biller’s provider status, the court stated that providers still have "recourse" inasmuch as claimants always can "file a [penalty] petition to establish [an] insurer’s liability."
Physical Therapy Inst., Inc. v Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Fee Review Hearing Off., 108 A.3d 957, 959 (Pa. Commw 2015).
Id. at 960.
The third case in this line of precedent, also from 2015, involved a physician who was dispensing pain medications from his own office. When doing this, the physician would "repackage" the medications and assign them new National Drug Codes that significantly increased the insurer’s reimbursement cost. The physician never billed the workers’ compensation insurer directly for the medications; instead, he assigned the claims to an entity called Prescription Partners, which then billed the insurer. When the insurer refused to pay the full cost of the repackaged drugs, Prescription Partners initiated fee review proceedings. The first-level administrative analyst concluded that Prescription Partners was not a provider under the Act and therefore lacked standing to initiate fee review. Prescription Partners then unsuccessfully appealed that determination to a Hearing Officer.
Prescription Partners, LLC, 2015 WL 6473394, at *1.
On further appeal, the Commonwealth Court cited the two cases discussed above and reiterated that the Bureau and its fee review hearing officers lack "jurisdiction to determine whether ah entity is a ‘provider’ of medical services, or simply a billing agency." The court stated that provider status "is a question of liability, which is beyond the scope of a fee review and must be decided by a Workers’ Compensation Judge." In a concurrence, Judge Cohn Jubelirer conceded that the majority "is not incorrect based on existing precedent," but she nevertheless suggested that "reconsideration of those cases appears appropriate."
Id. at *3 (quoting Physical Therapy Inst., 108 A.3d at 959).
Id.
Id at *5 (Cohn Jubelirer, J., concurring).
The Commonwealth Court’s holding in the above cases that the Bureau and its fee review hearing officers lack jurisdiction to consider the threshold issue of whether an entity is a provider unquestionably conflicts with the legislature’s intent when it created the fee review process. As Workers’ Compensation Judge and treatise author David B. Torrey has explained:
Under [1993 amendments to the Act], jurisdiction over disputes regarding amount and timeliness of payment by carriers to providers was taken away from WCJs. In substitution, administrative review was introduced, with any appeal de novo to a special hearing officer. The injured worker was not to be involved. The idea was to expedite disputes that occur in the program when the injured worker is not involved, but where, instead, the dispute is only a technical one regarding the correct amount to be reimbursed. And, of course, the Act mandates that all providers who treat workers’ compensation claimants are bound by the provisions of the Act; the law prohibits providers from direct-billing and balance-billing injured workers; and, generally, providers have no standing to file petitions directly with a WCJ to get their bills paid.
A controversy was injected into this system in the wake of three decisions (one in 2014 and two in 2015), from the Commonwealth Court restricting the Fee Review Hearing Officer to deciding only issues of the amount and timeliness of bills. Via these rulings, the Hearing Officer was prohibited from determining the basic issue of standing. In turn, this left two entities—one a billing agent, and the other a claim assignee—without recourse in the fee review system to complain of unsatisfactory payment, until a WCJ resolved any challenge to the entity’s identity as a "provider."
An irony was thus created under the Pennsylvania practice: the 1993 reform forces physicians and other providers to work within the system (no direct billing of the injured worker, for example, is permitted), but then left at least some of them without an effective, cost-efficient remedy to secure payment. In a further irony, the solution was for the provider to encourage the injured worker, who was intended to be left out of the controversy, to file a petition with a WCJ in the conventional track of litigation.
Critics of the regime created by these cases complained that provider "payment can be stymied by carrier/employer pretextually denying causation and the fact that the party seeking relief is in fact a ‘provider.’ " R. Burke McLemore, a leading critic of this school, admonished, "By the simple expedient of denying either causation or status as a provider, a carrier/employer can completely thwart reimbursement to a provider of legitimate bills—and then go ahead and settle the case with (or without) any admission of liability and leaving the provider hanging and without any effective remedy."
David B. Torrey & Andrew E. Greenberg, Workers’ Compensation Law and Practice § 9:157 (West 2022) (emphasis in original; footnotes omitted).
Fortunately, the Commonwealth Court overruled this line of precedent in 2019. In Armour Pharmacy v. Bureau of Workers’ Comp. Fee Review Hearing Office, 206 A.3d 660 (Pa. Commw. 2019), the Commonwealth Court held that "where the employer challenges a fee determination of the Medical Fee Review Section for the stated reason that the medical service was not rendered by a ‘provider’ within the meaning of the Act, that threshold question must be decided by the Hearing Office." The court nevertheless cautioned that its holding does not "expand the scope of the fee review proceeding beyond timeliness and amount owed to a provider that has treated a claimant for his work injury." The decision in Armour Pharmacy was never appealed to this Court.
Armour Pharmacy, 206 A.3d at 670.
Id. ("This holding does not allow the Hearing Office to determine the reasonableness of the medical care or service; the claimant’s injury as work-related; or the employer’s liability for a work injury").
III. The Decision Below
This appeal concerns prescriptions that injured employees had filled by a homedelivery pharmacy called Patient Direct RX. Behind the scenes, Patient Direct does not operate as a typical pharmacy would. When Patient Direct fills an injured workers’ prescription, it does not simply bill the workers’ compensation insurance carrier for the medication; instead, it sells to the treating physician who wrote the prescription in the first place the right to bill the workers’ compensation insurer.
Appellee Elite Care, RX, LLC is a billing agent for some of the medical provid- ers who purchased claims from Patient Direct RX. When Elite Care tried to collect payment on behalf of its providers, the appellant Insurers took the position that Elite Care is not a provider under the Act and refused payment. In total, Insurers denied payment for 110 different injured employees’ medications, resulting in $548,035.28 in unpaid prescriptions. When Elite Care’s invoices went unpaid, it initiated many separate fee-review proceedings with the Bureau. The Bureau ruled in favor of Elite Care in some of the cases, and the Insurers appealed some of those decisions to fee review hearing officers, arguing that the Bureau lacked jurisdiction to determine Elite Care’s status as a provider. The hearing officers agreed with Insurers that the Bureau lacked jurisdiction over Elite Care’s fee review applications.
Elite Care did not appeal those adverse decisions to the Commonwealth Court. Instead, Elite Care filed a civil lawsuit against Insurers alleging fraud, civil conspiracy, and unjust enrichment. Elite Care also sought a declaratory judgment that it is a provider under the Act. Insurers filed preliminary objections asserting the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over the dispute because Elite Care’s exclusive remedy lies in the workers’ compensation system. The trial court overruled Insurers’ preliminary objections, reasoning that the case is not a workers’ compensation case but rather a claim for damages arising from Insurers’ alleged fraud and conspiracy. A three-judge panel of the Superior Court unanimously affirmed the trial court and Insurers then successfully petitioned for en banc review.
Trial Court Opinion, 12/28/2020, at 2 ("This case is not a workers’ compensation matter. It is a declaratory judgment and damages case alleging that insurers and their administrator engaged in fraud and civil conspiracy by refusing to pay Elite [Care] money it is owed for medicine supplied to certain insured persons. Such a case is within the jurisdiction of this court.").
See Elite Care, Rx, LLC v. Premier Comp Solutions, LLC, 2022 WL 420030 (Pa. Super. 2022).
The en banc court affirmed the trial court, offering essentially three rationales for its decision First, the court noted that "Elite Care’s three common-law causes of action clearly predate the [Workers’ Compensation Act] and have been under the subject-matter jurisdiction of the courts of common pleas since time immemorial." Second,, the court emphasized that there is "nothing in the current Workers’ Compensation Act granting the Bureau jurisdiction over" the lands of tort claims that Elite Care alleged in its complaint. Lastly, the panel declined to follow Amour Pharmacy, accusing Commonwealth Court in that case of "manufacturing" an "administrative proceeding for a putative provider to seek redress within the Bureau." Criticizing the Amour Pharmacy Court for what it called "legislating from the bench," the majority opined that the Commonwealth Court created:
Elite Care, Rx, LLC v Premier Comp Solutions, LLC, 296 A.3d 29 (Pa. Super. 2023).
Id at33.
Id
Id
an administrative proceeding for putative providers by bestowing a [sic] jurisdiction upon Bureau Hearing Officers. That proceeding and jurisdiction cannot be found in the language of the [Workers’ Compensation Act]. Therefore, we decline to follow Amour Pharmacy, in
so far as it stands for the proposition that Elite Care may or should have sought redress within the Bureau.
Simply stated, the Worker’s Compensation Act does not provide for an administrative proceeding by or against putative providers or their billing agents in the Bureau. Such entities have no standing there, because the [Act] does not confer it upon them. That statute has not divested the original jurisdiction of the courts of common pleas over matters such as the instant lawsuit.
Id. at 34.
IV. Discussion
The decision below plainly conflicts with the Workers’ Compensation Act’s exclusive remedy provision, which this Court has held "extends to [the] workers’ compensation insurance carrier, protecting the insurer to the full extent of the employer’s protection." Because the employer/insurer’s obligation to pay the claimant’s medical expenses arises from the Workers’ Compensation Act in the first place, the workers’ compensation system is the exclusive forum for resolving both payment disputes and alleged mismanagement of workers’ compensation claims.
Kuney v PMA Ins Co, 525 Pa. 171, 578 A 2d 1285, 1286 (1990) ("An employer's liability for work-related injuries is governed solely by the [Workers’] Compensation Act, and the same is true of a compensation insurance carrier"); see 77 P S. § 481(a) ("The liability of an employer under this act shall be exclusive and in place of any and all other liability to such employes, his legal representative, husband or wife, parents, dependents, next of kin or anyone otherwise entitled to damages in any action at law or otherwise on account of any [compensable] injury or death[.]" (footnote omitted)).
Kuney, 578 A 2d at 1286.
The Superior Court’s rationale for departing from this well-established rule is unpersuasive. The panel first reasoned that "Elite Care’s three common-law causes of action" are cognizable in the trial court because the tort claims in question "predate" the 1915 Workers’ Compensation Act "and have been under the subject-matter jurisdiction of the courts of common pleas since time immemorial." Even Elite Care does not embrace this legal theory. There is no support whatsoever for the idea that whether a tort claim is barred by the exclusive remedy provision turns on whether the tort in question predates the 1915 Workers’ Compensation Act. To the extent that the court believed that the General Assembly only intended to bar civil suits for torts created after the enactment of the Workers’ Compensation Act, the panel was simply mistaken.
Elite Care, Rx, 296 A.3d at 33.
The court further underscored that "nothing in the current Workers’ Compensation Act grant[s] the Bureau jurisdiction over" the specific common-law torts alleged in Elite Care’s complaint. But that proves nothing. The reason why the Act does not give the Bureau jurisdiction over claims of fraud and unjust enrichment against employers/insurers in connection with their handling of workers’ compensation claims is simple: employers and insurers have been given immunity from such claims in exchange for accepting the remedies and obligations established in the Act. The absence of a statutory provision giving the workers’ compensation authorities jurisdiction over a specific set of claims does not mean that the General Assembly intended for those claims to proceed in the trial court. Indeed, there is nothing in the Act granting the workers’ compensation authorities jurisdiction over claims of negligence against employers. But that is not evidence that the legislature intended for trial courts to hear negligence suits against employers; it is the result of employers being immune from employee negligence suits.
Id
Kuney, 578 A.2d at 1286.
That leaves only the Superior Court’s theory that the exclusive remedy provision does not bar Elite Care’s civil suit because the Workers’ Compensation Act only allows providers (not putative providers) to seek administrative fee review. Of course, the Commonwealth Court in Armour Pharmacy held that the Bureau does have jurisdiction to decide provider status. And I have little doubt that Armour Pharmacy—at least broadly speaking—was correctly decided. The Act’s fee-review provision merely states that "a provider … who disputes the amount or timeliness of the payment from the employer or insurer shall file an application for fee review with the department." While the statute plainly limits participation in the fee review process to providers, it does not explicitly preclude the Bureau from deciding the threshold issue of an applicant’s provider status. The restriction is a judicial invention. Furthermore, to the extent that the statute is ambiguous regarding the Bureau’s authority to decide whether a putative provider is in fact a provider, the Superior Court’s chosen interpretation undoubtedly conflicts with the legislature’s intent, which was to create an expedited fee-review process within the workers’ compensation system that does not require the involvement of claimants.
See David B. Torrey & Andrew E. Greenberg, Workers’ Compensation. Law and Practice § 9:157 (West 2022) (highlighting the irony that the Commonwealth Court’s pre-Armour Pharmacy decisions left some putative providers "without an. effective, cost-efficient remedy to secure payment" while insisting that "the solution was for the provider to encourage the injured worker, who was intended to be left out of the controversy, to file a petition with a WCJ in the conventional track of litigation" (emphasis omitted)).
To my mind, the only objectionable aspect of the Armour Pharmacy decision is that it allows only fee review hearing officers to resolve challenges to a billing entity’s provider status, meaning that first-level administrative reviewers cannot consider the issue in the first instance. I concede that this piece of the Commonwealth Court’s decision is not grounded in any statutory text and appears to be driven primarily by the concern that those conducting the initial administrative review often lack legal training. It is this part of Armour Pharmacy that I believe prompted the court below to accuse the Commonwealth Court of "legislat[ing] from the bench." Regardless, this Court need not adopt Armour Pharmacy's reasoning in toto to conclude that the Superior Court erred below. It is enough to say that Armour Pharmacy was correct in abandoning the notion that provider status "is a question of liability, which is beyond the scope of a fee review and must be decided by a Workers’ Compensation Judge." Whether challenges to an entity’s provider status should be resolved in the first or the second level of the fee review process is irrelevant, It is enough for our purposes today to say that nothing in the Act prevents the issue of a putative provider’s standing from being resolved in fee review. The Superior Court therefore erred in holding that the Act "does not provide for an administrative proceeding by or against putative providers or their billing agents in the Bureau,"
See Armour Pharmacy, 206 A.3d at 670 ("We hold that where the employer challenges a fee determination of the Medical Fee Review Section for the stated reason that the medical service was not rendered by a ‘provider’ within the meaning of the Act, that threshold question must be decided by the Hearing Office. Jurisdiction, a quasi-judicial matter, is not to be decided by the Medical Fee Review Section, whose responsibility is solely administrative.").
See generally Crozer Chester Med. Ctr., 22 A.3d at 196 (explaining that the fee review process "is administered by nurses" whose "skills are markedly distinct from" those of workers’ compensation judges).
See Elite Care, Rx, LLC, 296 A.3d at 34 (accusing the Armour Pharmacy Court of creating "an administrative proceeding for putative providers" that "cannot be found in the language of the [Act]").
Prescription Partners, LLC, 2015 WL 6473394, at *3.
Elite Care, Rx, LLC, 296 A 3d at 34 (stating that the Act "does not provide for an administrative proceeding by or against putative providers or their billing agents in the Bureau," meaning that the statute "has not divested the original jurisdiction of the courts of common pleas" over actions brought by putative providers)
In sum, the decision below misinterpreted Subsection 306(f.1)(5) and created a state of affairs that plainly conflicts with the Act’s exclusive remedy provision. Elite Care’s sole remedy lies in the administrative realm. The lower courts therefore erred in allowing Elite Care’s civil suit to proceed.
I would reverse the Superior Court’s decision.
Justice Brobson joins this opinion in support of reversal.